Kingdom GT Seastalker Popper - Topwater Hard Bait
The Seastalker is a big, chugging popper built for anglers who want maximum surface disturbance. The wide concave face throws a heavy spray pattern and a deep pop on every rod snap, and the through-wire construction is rated for serious fish that hit hard and pull harder. This is an oversized bait, so most largemouth and smallmouth anglers will use it sparingly, for giant fish moments or mixed-species trips where stripers, pike, or musky are also in play.
Worked with sharp pops and pauses, it walks and chugs across the surface, drawing strikes from below rather than needing constant retrieval speed. Reserve it for open water with big forage present, low light, or when you are specifically hunting a trophy-class fish willing to commit to a large profile bait.
Specifications
| Type | Topwater popper, concave face |
| Length | 160mm or 185mm |
| Weight | 60g or 85g |
| Depth | Surface only |
| Action | Loud pop and chug with heavy spray |
| Hooks | Heavy duty trebles, through-wire rigged |
| Best for | Trophy-class largemouth, mixed species trips, big open water |
How to fish it
- Cast well past visible surface activity or structure to avoid spooking fish
- Snap the rod tip down sharply to throw spray, then pause 1-2 seconds
- Vary the pop-pause rhythm until a fish commits, some days want fast bursts, others want long pauses
- Keep the rod low and let the fish load up before setting the hook, do not pull the bait away on the strike
Frequently asked
Yes, for most largemouth and smallmouth situations it is oversized. It works best when you are targeting genuinely large fish or fishing water with big baitfish and mixed species.
A heavy or extra-heavy rod with 50-65lb braid is a good starting point given the bait's weight and the strength of fish it is designed to handle.
Yes, but less than with subtler baits. In stained water go with brighter or high-contrast finishes, in clear water a natural or translucent pattern draws less suspicion.
Low light periods, early morning or dusk, and any time you see large fish actively feeding on the surface.